# Contributing

## JUnit Contributor License Agreement

- You will only Submit Contributions where You have authored 100% of the content.
- You will only Submit Contributions to which You have the necessary rights. This means
  that if You are employed You have received the necessary permissions from Your employer
  to make the Contributions.
- Whatever content You Contribute will be provided under the Project License(s).

### Project Licenses

- All modules use [Eclipse Public License v2.0](LICENSE.md).

## Commit Messages

As a general rule, the style and formatting of commit messages should follow the guidelines in
[How to Write a Git Commit Message](https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/).

In addition, any commit that is related to an existing issue must reference the issue.
For example, if a commit in a pull request addresses issue \#999, it must contain the
following at the bottom of the commit message.

```
Issue: #999
```

## Pull Requests

Our [Definition of Done](https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/wiki/Definition-of-Done)
(DoD) offers some guidelines on what we expect from a pull request.
Feel free to open a pull request that does not fulfill all criteria, e.g. to discuss
a certain change before polishing it, but please be aware that we will only merge it
once the DoD is met.

Please add the following lines to your pull request description:

```markdown
---

I hereby agree to the terms of the JUnit Contributor License Agreement.
```

## Coding Conventions

### Naming Conventions

Whenever an acronym is included as part of a type name or method name, keep the first
letter of the acronym uppercase and use lowercase for the rest of the acronym. Otherwise,
it becomes _impossible_ to perform camel-cased searches in IDEs, and it becomes
potentially very difficult for mere humans to read or reason about the element without
reading documentation (if documentation even exists).

Consider for example a use case needing to support an HTTP URL. Calling the method
`getHTTPURL()` is absolutely horrible in terms of usability; whereas, `getHttpUrl()` is
great in terms of usability. The same applies for types `HTTPURLProvider` vs
`HttpUrlProvider`, etc.

Whenever an acronym is included as part of a field name or parameter name:

- If the acronym comes at the start of the field or parameter name, use lowercase for the
  entire acronym -- for example, `String url;`.
- Otherwise, keep the first letter of the acronym uppercase and use lowercase for the
  rest of the acronym -- for example, `String defaultUrl;`.

### Formatting

#### Code

Code formatting is enforced using the [Spotless](https://github.com/diffplug/spotless)
Gradle plugin. You can use `gradle spotlessApply` to format new code and add missing
license headers to source files. Formatter and import order settings for Eclipse are
available in the repository under
[junit-eclipse-formatter-settings.xml](gradle/config/eclipse/junit-eclipse-formatter-settings.xml)
and [junit-eclipse.importorder](gradle/config/eclipse/junit-eclipse.importorder),
respectively. For IntelliJ IDEA there's a
[plugin](https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/6546) you can use in conjunction with the
Eclipse settings.

It is forbidden to use _wildcard imports_ (e.g., `import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.*;`)
in Java code.

#### Documentation

Text in `*.adoc` and `*.md` files should be wrapped at 90 characters whenever technically
possible.

In multi-line bullet point entries, subsequent lines should be indented.

### Spelling

Use American English spelling rules when writing documentation as well as for
code -- class names, method names, variable names, etc.

### Javadoc

- Javadoc comments should be wrapped after 80 characters whenever possible.
- This first paragraph must be a single, concise sentence that ends with a period (`.`).
- Place `<p>` on the same line as the first line of a new paragraph and precede `<p>` with a blank line.
- Insert a blank line before at-clauses/tags.
- Favor `{@code foo}` over `<code>foo</code>`.
- Favor literals (e.g., `{@literal @}`) over HTML entities.
- New classes and methods should declare a `@since ...` tag.
- Use `@since 5.10` instead of `@since 5.10.0`.
- Do not use `@author` tags. Instead, contributors are listed on the [GitHub](https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/graphs/contributors) page.
- Do not use verbs in third-person form in the first sentence of the Javadoc for a method -- for example, use "Discover tests..." instead of "Discovers tests...".

#### Examples

See [`ExtensionContext`](junit-jupiter-api/src/main/java/org/junit/jupiter/api/extension/ExtensionContext.java) and
[`ParameterContext`](junit-jupiter-api/src/main/java/org/junit/jupiter/api/extension/ParameterContext.java) for example Javadoc.


### Tests

#### Naming

- All test classes must end with a `Tests` suffix.
- Example test classes that should not be picked up by the build must end with a `TestCase` suffix.

#### Assertions

- Use `org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions` for simple assertions.
- Use AssertJ when richer assertions are needed.
- Do not use `org.junit.Assert` or `junit.framework.Assert`.

#### Mocking and Stubbing

- Use either [Mockito](https://github.com/mockito/mockito) or hand-written test doubles.

### Logging

- In general, logging should be used sparingly.
- All logging must be performed via the internal `Logger` façade provided via the JUnit [LoggerFactory](https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/blob/main/junit-platform-commons/src/main/java/org/junit/platform/commons/logging/LoggerFactory.java).
- Levels defined in JUnit's [Logger](https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/blob/main/junit-platform-commons/src/main/java/org/junit/platform/commons/logging/Logger.java) façade, which delegates to Java Util Logging (JUL) for the actual logging.
  - _error_ (JUL: `SEVERE`, Log4J: `ERROR`): extra information (in addition to an Exception) about errors that will halt execution
  - _warn_ (JUL: `WARNING`, Log4J: `WARN`): potential usage or configuration errors that should not halt execution
  - _info_ (JUL: `INFO`, Log4J: `INFO`): information the users might want to know but not by default
  - _config_ (JUL: `CONFIG`, Log4J: `CONFIG`): information related to configuration of the system (Example: `ServiceLoaderTestEngineRegistry` logs IDs of discovered engines)
  - _debug_ (JUL: `FINE`, Log4J: `DEBUG`)
  - _trace_ (JUL: `FINER`, Log4J: `TRACE`)

### Deprecation

The JUnit 5 project uses the `@API` annotation from [API Guardian](https://github.com/apiguardian-team/apiguardian).
Publicly available interfaces, classes, and methods have a defined lifecycle
which is described in detail in the [User Guide](https://junit.org/junit5/docs/current/user-guide/#api-evolution).

That following describes the deprecation process followed for API items.

To deprecate an item:
- Update the `@API.status` to `DEPRECATED`.
- Update `@API.since`. Please note `since` describes the version when the
  status was changed and not the introduction of the element.
- Add the `@Deprecated` Java annotation on the item.
- Add the `@deprecated` JavaDoc tag to describe the deprecation, and refer to
  an eventual replacement.
- If the item is used in existing code, add `@SuppressWarnings("deprecation")`
  to make the build pass.

## Building the Project

Please refer to [the readme](README.md#building-from-source) for the most common
build commands.

### Build Parameters

The build can be influenced by a number of parameters. For example, measuring
JaCoCo code coverage of Test tasks can be enabled, or Predictive Test Selection
disabled. To see the full list, please run the following task:

`./gradlew :plugins:build-parameters:parameters`
